RotavatoR wrote:I really should check out this blog, but I haven't extensively done so yet, which makes me an awful human being. It's really cool that you have a blog though

Don't worry, I wouldn't want anyone to feel obligated. I just want to make it easy for people to keep up if they want to.

RotavatoR wrote:Also how do you feel about guest writers? Pretty sure some of us would like to write for you IF you don't feel like writing Or maybe on your birthday? I don't know >->

I'm gonna save this option for when I really don't have time to write an entry myself. And I'd probably need to approve the subject matter beforehand (wouldn't want someone to write a whole post on Webcomic A when I already had plans to write about Webcomic A myself, for instance). And I can't guarantee that I'll ever request guest posts.

Of course, if you want to write about webcomics, there's nothing to stop you from starting your own blog, or posting about them on your personal blog if you have one, or even just talking about them on the forum.

Never put off until tomorrow what you can put off until the day after.

It's quite...not dark, but rather depressing all the same. There's a ton of things that just make me feel really empty/sad inside. But, at the same time.....I kinda like that sort of thing. So...mixed.

Krika>Narra has tiny jerk people in her socks.>We are affirming our collective jerkhood by committing genocide on them.Guyshane>I'm going to read the logs and pray that that sentence makes more sense in context>No>No it does not

narrativedilettante wrote:Don't worry, I wouldn't want anyone to feel obligated. I just want to make it easy for people to keep up if they want to.

Well, it's more that I want to check it out, but then I don't. It came out wrong Anyway it's stupid >.>

narrativedilettante wrote:Of course, if you want to write about webcomics, there's nothing to stop you from starting your own blog, or posting about them on your personal blog if you have one, or even just talking about them on the forum.

I'm not that big of a webcomic fan to have a whole blog about it, and I don't know, I thought maybe it'd help your blog stand out more

narrativedilettante wrote:Of course, if you want to write about webcomics, there's nothing to stop you from starting your own blog, or posting about them on your personal blog if you have one, or even just talking about them on the forum.

I'm not that big of a webcomic fan to have a whole blog about it, and I don't know, I thought maybe it'd help your blog stand out more [/quote]

Then it sounds like we have different attitudes toward blog maintenance.

Never put off until tomorrow what you can put off until the day after.

Fun fact: When I was reading through the Unshelved archives, which took a few days, I had a dream that I was a librarian who used to work at the Malville public library, and Dewey was sad that I didn't work with him anymore.

Never put off until tomorrow what you can put off until the day after.

I would like to let you know that the only reason I'm NOT reading this blog right now is because I'm so sure you would convince me to start reading all of these and then all of the time would be gone.

>.>

*is so tempted to read anyway*

Normal people are the easiest to manipulate. Too smart and they have an annoying tendency to catch wind of your plans, too dumb and, in the words of a certain pirate, "You can never tell when they are about to do something incredibly...stupid."

Mimsy read and enjoyed it, said it was pretty good, and I ran into a mention of it on TvTropes and figured I would drop it here, in case you agreed. Give you some more material. Written by a Korean, though, but it is translated into English or Mimsy wouldn't have been able to read it.

Normal people are the easiest to manipulate. Too smart and they have an annoying tendency to catch wind of your plans, too dumb and, in the words of a certain pirate, "You can never tell when they are about to do something incredibly...stupid."

And, anyone who wants to suggest anything (or who already has): I will gladly listen to your suggestions, but I may not get around to any of them, and if I do it definitely won't be for a long time. There is a bookmark folder in my browser labeled "Read These Someday" and it is so full of webcomics I can't view it all at once on my screen. I spend a lot of my time reading webcomics and there's still more out there than I can ever hope to get to, let alone look at thoroughly and in-depth.

So, I'm always glad to learn of more comics that I might enjoy, but there's quite a bit of a backlog, just so you know.

Never put off until tomorrow what you can put off until the day after.

Out of all the comics I've done so far, this is the one I'm closest to. I actually remember seeing some of those examples in the post as they were being made. I didn't put in any examples that I had any direct input on, though. That would have just been too weird.

Never put off until tomorrow what you can put off until the day after.

-This is the webcomic that I've been reading the longest. I think I started reading it when I was 11. I even own a card, signed by the creator, certifying that I liked Diesel Sweeties before it sold out. (This was a reward for writing to newspapers asking them to run the syndicated version of Diesel Sweeties.)

-Have you seen the Scott Pilgrim movie? Well, the skull shirt that Scott wears in that movie originated in this comic, as the shirt that Metal Steve habitually wears.

-Merchandise from this comic also shows up all over The IT Crowd, but so does merchandise from A LOT of webcomics because The IT Crowd is awesome that way, to the extent that if I do a comic on my blog and something from it has shown up on The IT Crowd there is no guarantee whatsoever that I will remember and make a note of it.

-I'm tired and not 100% certain that I'm being coherent right now and that's not even a fact about Diesel Sweeties it's just about me and maybe I should stop writing.

Never put off until tomorrow what you can put off until the day after.